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  2. How to Stop Mushrooms From Taking Over Your Lawn - AOL

    www.aol.com/stop-mushrooms-taking-over-lawn...

    Here's how to stop mushrooms from growing in your lawn once you've pulled up the fruiting bodies: Keep Your Lawn Trimmed Hopefully, mowing is already on your regular list of yardwork chores.

  3. Fairy ring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairy_ring

    Fairy rings are detectable by sporocarps (fungal spore pods) in rings or arcs, as well as by a necrotic zone (dead grass), or a ring of dark green grass. Fungus mycelium is present in the ring or arc underneath. The rings may grow to over 10 metres (33 ft) in diameter, and they become stable over time as the fungus grows and seeks food underground.

  4. Conocybe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conocybe

    Conocybe is a genus of mushrooms with Conocybe tenera as the type species and at least 243 other species. There are at least 50 different species in North America. Most have a long, thin fragile stipe and are delicate, growing in grasslands on dead moss, dead grass, sand dunes, decayed wood, and dung.

  5. Why Have Mushrooms Taken Over My Lawn? - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-mushrooms-taken-over-lawn...

    Learn why and how mushrooms grow and what you should do when they sprout on your lawn.

  6. Conocybe apala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conocybe_apala

    Conocybe apala is a saprobe found in areas with rich soil and short grass such as pastures, playing fields, lawns, meadows as well as rotting manured straw, fruiting single or sparingly few ephemeral bodies. It is commonly found fruiting during humid, rainy weather with generally overcast skies.

  7. Zhuliangomyces illinitus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhuliangomyces_illinitus

    Fruiting : These mushrooms flower in between August or July and October or November. [9] [10] ... and grass lawns, growing in scattered formations. [11] Biology

  8. Coprinus comatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coprinus_comatus

    Coprinus comatus, commonly known as the shaggy ink cap, lawyer's wig, or shaggy mane, is a common fungus often seen growing on lawns, along gravel roads and waste areas. . The young fruit bodies first appear as white cylinders emerging from the ground, then the bell-shaped caps open

  9. Panaeolus foenisecii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panaeolus_foenisecii

    Panaeolus foenisecii, commonly called the mower's mushroom, haymaker, haymaker's panaeolus, [2] or brown hay mushroom, is a very common and widely distributed little brown mushroom often found on lawns and is not an edible mushroom.